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Vaccination may NOT stop Long CoViD !!! |
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Dutch Josh 2
Admin Group Joined: 21 Aug 2024 Status: Online Points: 899 |
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Posted: 05 Sep 2024 at 1:15am |
https://www.cidrap.umn.edu/covid-19/study-puts-understanding-long-covid-and-vaccination-question or https://www.cidrap.umn.edu/covid-19/study-puts-understanding-long-covid-and-vaccination-question ;
A new study from researchers at the Mayo Clinic suggests that being vaccinated against COVID-19 does little to prevent long COVID. The findings contradict what has become conventional wisdom in the last 3 years—that vaccines offer a chance to significantly reduce the risk of long COVID, or new or persistent symptoms 3 months or more after infection, most likely by reducing the severity of infection. Melanie Swift, MD, MPH, was the lead author of the study, which was published in Open Forum Infectious Diseases. She said despite the current thinking that vaccines reduce the risk of developing long COVID, she wasn’t surprised she found no association. "A lot of the early literature on long COVID was really defining long COVID through patient surveys," Swift told CIDRAP News. Swift’s study instead relied on participants having received a long-COVID diagnosis from a physician after having a documented case of post-vaccination COVID-19 infection. 6.9% developed long COVIDThe study was based on the electronic records of 41,652 people aged 5 years or older with SARS-CoV-2–positive polymerase chain reaction (PCR) tests between February 2021 and December 2022 and a diagnosis of long COVID 30 days to 6 months following infection. The average age of patients was 41 years, 55.2% were female, and 90.7% were White. At the time of initial infection, 9,744 (23.4 %) were vaccinated with two doses of mRNA COVID-19 vaccine, and 7,658 (18.4 %) had received more than two mRNA doses. A total of 8.2% of patients required hospitalization for COVID-19, and most infections occurred during the Delta and Omicron eras (39.8% and 47.1%, respectively). In total, 6.9% of patients were diagnosed as having long COVID, with no observed difference between unvaccinated patients, those vaccinated with two doses of an mRNA vaccine, and those with more than two doses.
Long COVID was associated with older age, female sex, and hospitalization for the initial infection. It was inversely associated with infection during the Omicron period, the authors wrote. Swift said that vaccines still play a role in preventing long COVID. "If you don't get COVID, you don't get long COVID," she said. "It remains the most important medical tools in our arsenal by virtue of not getting COVID and severe COVID, but we can’t stop there and say 'if you were vaccinated, you don’t have to worry about long COVID.' " DJ, So vaccination may limit risks of developing CoViD symptoms-the "suggestion" being in that way vaccination may limit-still-the chances for Long CoViD... -One of the likelyhoods may be that vaccinated people THINK they are (far) less likely to develop Long CoViD...So if they develop long term health issues may believe it is not related to (less symptomatic) CoViD.... Statistics indicate excess deaths in unvaccinated groups are higher...Also gender matters; Women tend to get more auto-immune diseases, men simply die more often... DJ-AGAIN "vaccines only" strategy will NOT get us out of the ongoing global health crisis...
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